Oh, and the news that Ian Stewart, 57, who was jailed for 34 years after smothering his wife, children’s author Helen Bailey, is being questioned over the death of his first wife, Diane Stewart, who died after collapsing in the garden of the couple’s home in Cambridgeshire.

If you read the same stories you may have taken a moment to despair that the papers are full of similar stories every day — of women being killed, brutalised and attacked by the men who purport to love them.

Or, you may have barely noticed because these stories are so ­commonplace.

Of course, not all men who threaten to kill their partners go on to do so.

When police raided his flat in Hulme, Manchester, they found more than 600 images – including 68 films classed as Category A, the highest level of children being sexually abused.

To be clear, the images showed children as young as seven being sexually abused by adults.

Still, Judge Elizabeth Nicholls, decided prison wasn’t necessary, saying Williamson had been “open and frank” with the police about his behaviour and because the man has allegedly taken “tentative steps to address these issues”.

Man watches 'fat porn' on library PC in Slough as a child sits opposite him

So the guy was in possession of 600 images including many of the worst kind of paedophilia – and he’s still in the community?

Who in their right mind would want this guy in their community?

I know the prisons are buckling, so let’s just build more – even if that includes sending prisoners out to sea in containers.

When is the justice system going to start thinking about the victims as opposed to the perpetrators?

It’s not quite clear what happened beforehand but other passengers and crew claim to have seen Ms Longstaff in several arguments with her partner Craig Rayment, above with Kay, on the evening of the incident.

Once she’d been rescued, Mr Rayment’s estranged wife Kelly offered Ms Longstaff some unsolicited support, saying: “If I was on a ship with him, I would get off any way I could.”

Oh dear.

What happened to Kay Longstaff, why did she jump overboard and how did the she survive at sea for 10 hours?